DONALD Trump’s glam ex-attorney who skyrocketed to fame for her fiery speeches on the 2024 campaign trail has divorced her second husband, according to reports.

Alina Habba, who was the president’s legal spokesperson from 2021 to 2025, reportedly called it quits with businessman Gregg Reuben after just five years.

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Alina Habba, who was nominated to be New Jersey’s top prosecutor, has reportedly split from her husbandCredit: AP
 

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Habba and businessman Gregg Reuben called it quits last month after five years of marriage, according to court documentsCredit: Instagram/alina_habba
 

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She was Donald Trump’s legal spokesperson from 2021 to 2025Credit: Instagram/alina_habba
She filed last month in New Jersey and they were able to quickly settle, the Daily Mail reported, citing court documents.

Habba, 41, was nominated to serve as the US attorney for the District of New Jersey in July, but she was disqualified by an appeals court.

She’s now working as a senior advisor to the US attorney general and living in a mansion in sunny Mar a Lago, Florida, close to Trump’s home base, according to the outlet.

Habba and Reuben were married on New Year’s Eve in 2020. She has two children from a previous marriage and he also has one with his ex – but they didn’t have any kids together.

Reuben is the founder and CEO of a Centerpark – a parking management and real estate investment first based in New York City.

The successful entrepreneur, who graduated from Harvard Business School, has also been serving as a board chair for the US Department of Transportation since July.

The Trump administration pushed to keep Habba as New Jersey’s top prosecutor, but she couldn’t get Senate confirmation after her interim appointment expired.

One lower court judge decided that she had been unlawfully serving in the post, threatening to invalidate all of her decisions after July.

At one point, federal attorneys replaced Habba with her second in command, but Attorney General Pam Bondi swiftly fired the replacement and reinstated her.

After Habba stepped down, Bondi officially replaced her with a three-person leadership team who shared responsibilities.

But according to federal judge Matthew Brann, this move was illegal.

He said in a ruling Thursday that Bondi didn’t obtain the necessary Senate approval for the hirings, making them unconstitutional.

“On the [government’s] reading, the president would have had no need ever to seek the Senate’s advice and consent for his [US attorney] appointments,” Brann, chief judge of the district court for the middle district of Pennsylvania, wrote.

“Whenever there was a fair prospect of the Senate’s rejecting his preferred nominee, the president could have appointed that individual unilaterally … to serve ‘ad infinitum’.

“It is unthinkable that such an obvious means for the executive to expand its power would have been overlooked by Congress.”

Habba was raised in New Jersey and born to Iraqi immigrants who moved to the US in the 80s.

After a brief stint in the fashion industry, she earned her law degree at Widener University in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, in 2010.

She hasn’t made any comments about the reported split with her husband, but continues posting about Trump and his cabinet.

On Tuesday evening, she shared a Truth Social post penned by the president about America establishing energy dominance.